relieved him of his sidearm.
"Man with teeth like yours," Dion said, "should not be remarking on the flaws of others. Man with teeth like yours should just keep his mouth shut."
"Yes, sir," the boy whispered.
"What's your name?"
"Perkin, sir."
"Well, Perkinsir," Dion said, "me and my partner will at some point discuss whether we let you live today. If we decide in your favor, you'll know 'cause you ain't dead. If we don't, it'll be to teach you you should have been nicer to people. Now put your fucking hands behind your back."
Pescatore gangsters came out of the back of the truck first - four of them in summer suits and florid ties. They pushed the orange-haired boy ahead of them, Sal Urso pointing the kid's own rifle at his back, the boy blubbering that he didn't want to die today, not today. The Cubans, about thirty of them, came out after them, most of them dressed in the white drawstring pants and white shirts with the bell-hemlines that reminded Joe of pajamas. They all carried rifles or pistols. One carried a machete and another carried two large knives at the ready. Esteban led them. He wore a dark green tunic and matching trousers, the field outfit of choice, Joe assumed, for banana republic revolutionaries. He nodded at Joe as he and his men entered the grounds and then spread out around the back of the building.
"How many men inside?" Joe asked Perkin.
"Fourteen."
"How come so few?"
"Middle of the week. You come here on a weekend?" A little bit of mean returned to his eyes. "You'd have met some men."
"I'm sure I would have." Joe climbed out of the truck. "Right now though, Perkin, I'll have to settle for you."
The only guy to put up a fight when he saw thirty armed Cubans flood the halls of the armory was a giant. Six and a half feet tall, Joe guessed. Maybe taller. A huge head and a long jaw and shoulders like crossbeams. He rushed three Cubans who were under orders not to shoot. They shot anyway. Didn't hit the giant. Missed him clean from twenty feet away. Hit another Cuban instead. A guy who'd been rushing up behind the giant.
Joe and Dion were right behind the Cuban when he got shot. He spun and toppled in front of them like a bowling pin and Joe shouted, "Stop shooting!"
Dion screamed, "¡Dejar de disparar! ¡Dejar de disparar!"
They stopped, but Joe couldn't be sure if they were just reloading their creaky bolt-action rifles or not. He grabbed the rifle from the one who'd been shot, grabbed it by the barrel and cocked his arm as the giant rose from the defensive crouch he'd adopted when they started shooting at him. Joe swung the rifle into the side of his head, and the giant bounced off the wall and came for him, arms flailing. Joe changed his grip and drove the butt of the rifle through the flurry of the guy's arms and into his nose. He heard it break, heard his cheekbone break with it as the butt slid off his face. Joe dropped the rifle when the big man hit the ground. He pulled handcuffs from his pocket and Dion got one of the guy's wrists and Joe got the other and they cuffed them behind his back as he took a lot of huffing breaths, his blood pooling on the floor.
"You gonna live?" Joe asked him.
"Gonna kill you."
"Sounds like you're gonna live." Joe turned to the three trigger-happy Cubans. "Get another guy and take this one to the cells."
He looked at the one they'd shot. He was curled on the floor, mouth open and gasping. He didn't sound good and he didn't look good - marble white, way too much blood flowing from his midsection. Joe knelt by him, but in the moment it took to do so, the boy died. His eyes were open and tilted up and to the right, as if he were trying to remember his wife's birthday or where he'd left his wallet. He lay on his side, one arm pinned awkwardly beneath him, the other splayed up and behind his head. His shirt had bunched up at his ribs and left his abdomen exposed.
The three men who'd killed him blessed themselves as they dragged the giant past him and Joe.
When Joe closed the boy's eyelids, he looked quite young. He might have been twenty, or he could have been as young as sixteen. Joe rolled him onto